Three homeless men are suing the city for rousting them from a street encampment this year, saying they are owed $1,515 for lost personal possessions — and an unspecified amount for the emotional trauma.

“I’m praying to God because I don’t believe in Mayor de Blasio,” said Jesus Morales, 42, who has lived on the street since 1999.

Morales and two other homeless men are suing over their ouster from an East Harlem encampment by cops on Oct. 2.

Floyd Parks, 61, another of the men, who filed their notices of claim against the city Monday, complains that police rousted him at 5 a.m. and threw his belongings in a waiting garbage truck.

The group, led by the organization Picture the Homeless, opposes the mayor’s Home-STAT plan, which encourages people to report the homeless to 311 so police can remove them.

“Our No. 1 priority in street-homeless outreach is to get individuals the shelter and services they deserve,” De Blasio spokeswoman Karen Hinton said.

The ouster had nothing to do with Home-STAT, she said. The incident involved homeless people sleeping outside a school on 127th Street and Park Avenue.

“It is illegal for individuals to trespass and sleep on school grounds, and we will not tolerate it for security and safety reasons,” Hinton said.